Ladogual - Bannerlord

Her heart is her harbor. A natural crescent carved by glacial retreat, it is perpetually choked with pack ice for three seasons of the year. In the brief, melancholy "summer," the ice recedes just enough to allow the square-sailed longships of the Skolderbroda—the Sturgian sea-raiders—to slip out into the gray mists.

These are not traders. They do not carry silks or dates. A Ladogual longship returns with what the sea provides: whale oil rendered in iron pots, bolts of heavy wool from the Nordlands, and the terrified, gagged prisoners of a coastal raid on some Imperial fishing village. The slave market in the Lower Circle is Ladogual’s true economy. A man’s worth here is measured not in denars, but in the weight of his chains and the hardness of his back.

Ladogual is the rusted axe-blade of the Sturgian Principality, jammed into the soft, frozen earth where the snowy pine forests of the north meet the brackish, churning waters of the Sea of Nords. It is not a beautiful city. It has none of the marble vanity of Lycaron, none of the golden spice-towers of Quyaz. Ladogual is a place of dark, wet timber, slick cobblestones, and roofs that slope aggressively to shed a winter's weight of snow that never truly melts. bannerlord ladogual

A Sturgian of Ladogual will charge you triple for a loaf of bread. But if a blizzard howls down from the north and you are outside his door, he will drag you inside, force a horn of mead into your frozen hands, and not ask your name until the sun returns. Their cruelty is practical. Their generosity is survival.

This is not a city of dreams. It is not a city of empires. Her heart is her harbor

Winter is Ladogual’s true liege-lord. When the White Walk descends—a howling, weeks-long blizzard of negative wind chills and pitch-black afternoons—the city’s population halves. The weak die. The poor freeze in their sleep, their bodies only discovered when the spring thaw turns the alleys into rivers of mud and grisly discovery. The strong grow hard. They chop wood until their hands bleed, they drink kumis (fermented mare's milk) that could strip paint, and they watch the horizon for the flare of a Sturgian beacon.

Most travelers approaching the city of Ladogual for the first time mistake the stench for death. They clutch their cloaks tighter, eye the grim-faced Sturgian guards on the ramparts, and whisper prayers to whatever god they keep. But the smell is not death. It is survival . These are not traders

Ask any mercenary in the taverns of Zeonica about Ladogual, and they will spit. "It’s a trap," they’ll growl. "A frozen maw."